Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. v. Estate of Rowe

224 So. 3d 1152, 2017 WL 2665122, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 1146
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 2017
DocketNo. 51,489-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 So. 3d 1152 (Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. v. Estate of Rowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. v. Estate of Rowe, 224 So. 3d 1152, 2017 WL 2665122, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 1146 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

| rBank of Néw York Mellon appeals a judgment that found that it abandoned its executory process’ suit against the named heirs of William D. Rowe, and dismissed the suit with prejudice. We affirm the dismissal, but amend it to be without prejudice.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2003, Iree Rowe and her husband,. William D. Rowe, took out a home equity line of credit with MBNA America, with a limit of $51,300. They executed a multiple indebtedness mortgage affecting their home, described as Lot 2, Boucher Subdivision, Cullen, La.1 The mortgage included a confession of judgment, acceleration clause and other provisions associated with executory process. Within a month, MBNÁ indorsed the mortgage package to Countrywide Home Loans,

William Rowe died in December 2004, and Iree died in January 2005. The mortgage fell into arrears.

On February 8, 2008, Countrywide filed this petition for executory process against “the Estate of Iree Sterling Mims Rowe, aka Iree S. Rowe,” alleging that Iree had died and no succession had been opened.2 It recited the essentials for executory process and prayed for seizure and sale of Lot 2, Boucher Subdivision. The writ issued and the sheriff filed notice on February 27.

On June 25, 2008, a curator filed an answer on behalf of Iree’s heirs. He recited that he was trying to contact them, and generally denied all of Countrywide’s allegations.

On January 15, 2010, someone identified only as Kathryn-Talbot filed a “notarial act of correction” in-the Webster Parish mortgage records. This recited that the original-mortgage documents actually intended- to encumber Lot 2, less and except the north 10 feet thereof, Boucher Subdivision. This document was filed only in the mortgage records, notan the suit record.

On May 4, 2011, someone identified only as “from the foreclosure department” faxed a letter to the sheriffs office, asking to stop the scheduled foreclosure “so that we may amend the petition to reflect the [1155]*1155correct legal description of the. property.” The procés-verbal, issued the same day, described Lot 1 and the north 10 feet of Lot 2, Boucher Subdivision, with an assessed value of only $1,500. However, no sale took place.

On December 5, 2012, Countrywide filed a supplemental and amended petition for executory process. This cited the notarial act of correction, filed January 15, 2010, and requested seizure and sale of Lot 1 and the north 10 feet of Lot 2, Boucher Subdivision. An ad hoc judge signed the order of seizure and sale the same day.

On January 29, 2013, Lula B. Cornelius, the administratrix of Iree’s succession, filed a petition to arrest the seizure and sale. She showed that the original, mortgage referred to Lot 2, but that Countrywide was now trying to seize more property, Lot 1 and the north 10 feet of Lot 2\ that the person who filed the notarial act of correction, Ms. Talbot, had no apparent connection to the original mortgage; and that the correction was much more than the | a“clerical error” allowed by statute, R.S. 35:2.1. A rule was set for March 3, but no one appeared for it.

On August 13, 2013, Countrywide filed a motion to substitute Bank of New York Mellon (“BNY”) as plaintiff, as BNY had acquired the mortgage note. On September 16, BNY filed a motion to convert the matter to an ordinary proceeding.

In a second supplemental and amending petition, BNY admitted its “inadvertence and error” , in the original property description, alleging that the debtors had really intended to encumber Lots 1 and 2, Boucher Subdivision, and named as defendants Loretha R. Pointer and other heirs of William Rowe (“the William Rowe heirs”).

The William Rowe heirs promptly filed a motion to dismiss for abandonment, La. C, C. P. art. 561, They alleged that no step in the prosecution or defense had occurred for over three years, from June 25, 2008, when Iree’s curator filed an answer, until August 15, 2012, when Countrywide filed a motion to substitute counsel.3 The district court signed, that very day, an ex parte order dismissing BNY’s claims against the William Rowe heirs, with prejudice.

BNY filed a “motion for amendment of judgment and motion to set aside dismissal.” It conceded that the property description had expanded from Lot 2 (in the act of mortgage and original petition) to Lot 1 and the north 10 feet of Lot 2 (in the notarial act of correction and first supplemental and amended petition) to Lots 1 and 2 (in the second supplemental and Lamended petition). However, it argued that code articles about abandonment do not apply to executory process, citing Greater New Orleans Homestead Ass’n v. Bell, 219 La. 41, 52 So.2d 241 (1951); that the notarial act of correction was a step in the prosecution; and that Art. 661 ’must always' be construed in favor of maintaining the suit. Alternatively, it argued that any dismissal for abandonment should be presumptively without prejudice.

The William Rowe heirs opposed the motion, arguing that dismissal with prejudice, though rare, is within the court’s discretion; that Bell relied on an article in the former Code of Practice, which had been repealed, and the current law, La. C. C. P. art. 561, makes no exception for executory proceedings; that BNY converted the matter to ordinary process, and could not argue any benefit of executory process; and that the notarial act of correction exceeded the statutory authority to [1156]*1156correct a “clerical error” and was without legal effect.

After a hearing limited to argument, a different judge of the 26th JDC rendered an opinion denying the motion to amend or set aside the judgment.4

BNY took this devolutive appeal, raising four assignments of error.

DISCUSSION

Application of Abandonment to Executory Process

By its first assignment of error, BNY urges that Art. 561 does not apply to this, an executory proceeding. It argues that in executory process, once the trial court has issued a writ of seizure, the court process is complete and there is nothing left to abandon. In support, it cites, generally, La. C. C. | fiP. arts. 2631-2644, and specifically, the official revision comment to Art. 2638, and urges the rule is confirmed in Greater New Orleans Homestead, supra. It contends that a writ of seizure pursuant to a confession of judgment in a mortgage is a final judgment, which cannot be abandoned. BNY concedes that it converted the matter to an ordinary proceeding, but argues that this was after the alleged abandonment occurred, so the current status of the case is irrelevant.

Abandonment is regulated by La. C. C. P. art. 561, which provides, in pertinent part:

Art. 561. Abandonment in trial and appellate court
A. (1) An action * * * is abandoned when the parties fail to take any step in its prosecution or defense in the trial court for a period of three years, unless it is a succession proceeding[.] * * *

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 So. 3d 1152, 2017 WL 2665122, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 1146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/countrywide-home-loans-inc-v-estate-of-rowe-lactapp-2017.